Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

No reason to withhold vaccine doses

- Marc A. Thiessen Marc A. Thiessen is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.

The Trump administra­tion could deliver a coronaviru­s vaccine to all at-risk health-care workers in the United States and everyone over 75 in December. But the Health and Human Services Department is only shipping out 45% of the available vaccine during the deadliest period since the pandemic began.

The reason for holding back more than half of the vaccine, they argue, is that it is a twodose regimen and they want to make sure they have second doses available for everyone who gets the first. So instead of pushing out as many doses as possible immediatel­y, they are holding back 55% of available supply — 50% for second doses and about 5% as a “safety stock.” As a result, they will distribute only about 18 million doses this year when about 40 million will be available.

That is insane. We are at the peak of the pandemic. On Dec. 17, 3,406 people died of COVID-19, the highest singleday death toll since the pandemic began. Holding back 55% of your available vaccine during the pandemic’s peak is like holding back 55% of your available ammunition on D-Day, because the troops will need those bullets a month from now when the Nazis are on the run.

We know the first vaccine dose provides significan­t immunity. Moderna reported its vaccine was 80.2% effective after the first dose, and experts believe the Pfizer vaccine has a similarly high efficacy rate. So why are we immunizing fewer than half the Americans we could be during the worst period of the pandemic? Today almost 52,000 nursing home residents a week are getting COVID, and about 21% of them die. Getting vaccines to nursing homes a month earlier could save more than 40,000 lives alone.

Defenders of saving doses say we don’t know how long immunity lasts from the first dose, so we need to make sure we have second doses available. But there will be 50 million more doses coming in January that can be used for that second dose, and 60 million in February.

The only reason to hold back doses is to hedge against the risk of a manufactur­ing failure. But should that happen, we have a much bigger problem as a country than not getting people second doses. And the theoretica­l risk of a delay in delivering second doses pales with the actual risk to vulnerable Americans of not getting a first dose while the pandemic is raging.

Everyone should get their second dose. Yet even if there was a slight delay, there is no evidence it would cause any harm. The reason companies gave the second dose less than a month after the first was to ensure people in the trials actually returned for the second dose, and to get to trial results faster.

It may make sense to reserve 5% of the vaccine in case of distributi­on problems, but 55% is absurd and inhumane. We have a small window, a few weeks, to save lives during the current wave. That window is closing fast. We need to get protective immunity into the population while the crisis is still going on.

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